Episode-349 - My Anime Shopping Tree & My Cold Prodigy Wife! - NovelsTime

My Anime Shopping Tree & My Cold Prodigy Wife!

Episode-349

Author: LordNoname
updatedAt: 2025-09-17

Chapter : 697

“Allow me to handle it,” Mei Jing said, her eyes gleaming with a new, cold fire. She was already stepping into her new role, taking command. “I will not recruit from the capital. The risk of another embedded agent is too high. Instead, I will use my family’s network in the countryside. I will find young, ambitious, and intelligent men and women from outside the political sphere. People with clean histories, whose families are known to us, whose loyalty can be vetted and secured. I will build a new administrative layer, a staff that is loyal not just to the ducal house, but to us. To this family we have built.”

She looked at him, her expression a promise of absolute loyalty and ruthless efficiency. “You have built this house, my lord. I will protect it. I will keep the fires lit until you return. And I will make sure that when you do, it is stronger and more secure than when you left it. You have my word.”

Lloyd looked at her, at the fierce determination in her eyes, and felt a profound sense of relief. He had made the right choice. His house was in good hands. The burden of leadership, which had felt so heavy just moments before, now felt a little lighter. He had a true second-in-command.

“I accept your counsel, and I grant you the authority to proceed,” he said formally. “Build our fortress, Mei Jing. I am counting on you.”

With the succession settled and the future of his enterprise secured, the final piece was in place. He was now free to turn his full attention to the journey ahead, to the kingdom of merchants and the "certain fate" that awaited him there.

The weight of Lloyd’s trust settled onto Mei Jing’s shoulders, not as a burden, but as a mantle of authority she had unknowingly craved her entire life. For years, she had been a brilliant mind in a gilded cage, her gender and lack of a high noble title placing a firm ceiling on her ambitions. She could advise, she could strategize, she could influence, but she could never truly lead. Lloyd Ferrum had not just broken that ceiling; he had obliterated it. He had seen her for what she was—a general, not a lieutenant—and had handed her an army. The gratitude she felt was a fierce, burning thing, a fire that forged her already strong loyalty into something unbreakable, something akin to tempered steel.

She immediately took command, her mind shifting from subordinate to leader. “Lyra,” she said, her voice crisp and clear, “I need a full audit of our current supply chain vulnerabilities, with a focus on single-source dependencies. I want a report on my desk by tomorrow evening.”

Lyra, who respected efficiency above all else, gave a single, sharp nod of assent. “It will be done.”

“Tisha,” Mei Jing continued, her gaze softening slightly, “your role is now more critical than ever. You are our public face. With Lord Ferrum away, rumors will fly. You will manage our public relations. Project an image of stability, confidence, and business-as-usual. Quash any whispers of instability with overwhelming charm and professionalism.”

Tisha’s smile returned, this time genuine and filled with a new sense of purpose. “They won’t know he’s even gone. Consider it handled.”

“Jasmin,” Mei Jing said, turning to the quiet forewoman. “You knew Pia better than any of us. You also know the heart of this manufactory. I am entrusting you with internal morale. Be the eyes and ears among the workers. Listen to their concerns, their fears. We cannot afford to let the poison of suspicion fester. You are our shield against internal rot.”

Jasmin, who had been struggling with her grief, looked up, her expression filled with a new, solemn responsibility. She had lost a friend, but she would not lose the family she had found here. “I understand,” she whispered, her voice steady. “I will not let you down.”

Lloyd watched the exchange with a deep, quiet satisfaction. He had planted a seed, and it had grown into a formidable tree with strong, capable branches. His departure would not weaken his organization; it would temper it, forcing its leaders to grow into the full measure of their potential.

The meeting concluded, and the team dispersed, each member moving with a new, clear-eyed purpose. Lloyd was left alone in the study, a strange sense of peace settling over him. He had faced the betrayal, endured the loss, and had come out the other side with a team that was not just intact, but stronger, more united, and more resolute than before.

Chapter : 698

The [All-Seeing Eye] was a presence now, a cool, latent energy that resided behind his own vision. It was a lens he had yet to master, a key to a billion locks he had yet to find. The initial euphoria of the acquisition had been swiftly replaced by the cold, hard pragmatism of the engineer. A powerful tool was useless in the hands of an untrained operator.

He had tested it again, just briefly. He had focused his will and looked at a simple iron quill stand on his desk. The world had dissolved into that breathtaking, terrifying new reality. He saw the familiar, solid object, but he also saw its inner life. He saw the microscopic imperfections in the casting, the subtle crystalline lattice of the ferrous metal, the faint, lingering heat signature from where his hand had rested moments before. The sheer volume of data was an avalanche, a tsunami of raw information that threatened to overwhelm his consciousness. It was like trying to listen to every conversation in a bustling city simultaneously. He could hear the noise, but he couldn't understand the language.

That was the crux of the problem. He possessed a divine instrument of analysis, but he lacked the foundational knowledge to interpret what he was seeing. In his previous life, he could have looked at a human body with this power and instantly identified the tibia, the fibula, the circulatory system, the nervous system. He could have named every organ, every bone, every muscle, because he had spent decades studying the schematics of the human machine.

Here, in Riverio, the biology was similar, but subtly different. The presence of Spirit Cores, the flow of mana through the body, the way a person’s life force interacted with their physical form—these were all new variables, new layers of data his new eye was presenting to him without context. He was seeing the answers to questions he didn't even know how to ask. He needed a lexicon. A textbook. A Rosetta Stone to translate the divine language of his new perception into the functional knowledge of this world.

There was only one person who possessed such a library, and more importantly, the esoteric understanding to curate it.

He rose from his chair, his movements deliberate. The path to mastering this new, subtle power would not begin in the training yard or the Soul Farm. It would begin in a place he had avoided for most of his life: the quiet, scholarly world of his mother.

Duchess Milody Austin Ferrum was an enigma. To the world, she was the serene, graceful wife of the Arch Duke, a picture of quiet nobility and gentle warmth. To her children, she was a loving but often distant presence, a calming force in the storm of their formidable father. But Lloyd, now armed with the knowledge of two lifetimes and the burden of his awakened Austin bloodline, was beginning to see the truth. His mother was not just a duchess; she was a guardian of secrets, the inheritor of a power so profound and reality-bending that it made the Ferrum’s famous Steel Blood look like a blacksmith’s parlor trick.

He found her not in her formal receiving chambers, but in her private solarium, a magnificent glass-domed room filled with exotic plants and the soft, melodic sound of a small, enchanted fountain. The air was warm and humid, thick with the scent of blooming night-orchids and damp earth. She was sitting in a simple wicker chair, a cup of herbal tea steaming gently on the table beside her, her attention focused on a delicate, silver-leafed plant she was carefully pruning with a pair of small, ornate shears.

She looked up as he entered, and a genuine, warm smile touched her lips. It was a smile that always managed to reach her eyes, which held a wisdom that seemed as ancient and deep as the earth itself.

“Lloyd,” she said, her voice a soft, musical chime. “This is an unexpected pleasure. Your duties at the manufactory and the Academy seem to consume you these days. I was beginning to think you had forgotten your old mother.”

There was a light, teasing quality to her words, but her gaze was sharp, analytical. She was studying him, he realized, just as he was studying her. She would have felt the shift in him, the echo of the new power settling into his soul.

“Never, Mother,” he replied, approaching her and offering a respectful bow. “In fact, it is my studies that bring me here. I have a request to make of you.”

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